6533b850fe1ef96bd12a839a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Drosophila Full-Length Amyloid Precursor Protein is Required for Visual Working Memory and Prevents Age-Related Memory Impairment
Doris KretzschmarRoland StraussBurkhard PoeckFranziska RiecheKatia Carmine-simmensubject
0301 basic medicineAgingFasciclin 2Nerve Tissue ProteinsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAmyloid precursor proteinMemory impairmentAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsOlfactory memorybiologyWorking memoryfungiMembrane ProteinsLong-term potentiationCell biology030104 developmental biologyDrosophila melanogasterMemory Short-Termbiology.proteinVisual PerceptionAmyloid Precursor Protein SecretasesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesAmyloid precursor protein secretase030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurotrophindescription
Summary The β-amyloid precursor protein (APP) plays a central role in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, its normal physiological functions are still unclear. APP is cleaved by various secretases whereby sequential processing by the β- and γ-secretases produces the β-amyloid peptide that is accumulating in plaques that typify AD. In addition, this produces secreted N-terminal sAPPβ fragments and the APP intracellular domain (AICD). Alternative cleavage by α-secretase results in slightly longer secreted sAPPα fragments and the identical AICD. Whereas the AICD has been connected with transcriptional regulation, sAPPα fragments have been suggested to have a neurotrophic and neuroprotective role [1]. Moreover, expression of sAPPα in APP-deficient mice could rescue their deficits in learning, spatial memory, and long-term potentiation [2]. Loss of the Drosophila APP-like (APPL) protein impairs associative olfactory memory formation and middle-term memory that can be rescued with a secreted APPL fragment [3]. We now show that APPL is also essential for visual working memory. Interestingly, this short-term memory declines rapidly with age, and this is accompanied by enhanced processing of APPL in aged flies. Furthermore, reducing secretase-mediated proteolytic processing of APPL can prevent the age-related memory loss, whereas overexpression of the secretases aggravates the aging effect. Rescue experiments confirmed that this memory requires signaling of full-length APPL and that APPL negatively regulates the neuronal-adhesion molecule Fasciclin 2. Overexpression of APPL or one of its secreted N termini results in a dominant-negative interaction with the FASII receptor. Therefore, our results show that specific memory processes require distinct APPL products.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-03-01 |